0% found this document useful (0 votes)
12 views67 pages

Capstone 1

The capstone project focuses on the installation of themes using WordPress on localhost, aiming to enhance user experience and website performance. It explores the importance of themes in improving visual appeal, navigation, and SEO features of websites. The study relies on secondary data and highlights the methodology, objectives, and limitations of the research conducted by students from Adikavi Nannaya University under the guidance of Dr. SVVSN Murthy.

Uploaded by

kavyasruthii08
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
0% found this document useful (0 votes)
12 views67 pages

Capstone 1

The capstone project focuses on the installation of themes using WordPress on localhost, aiming to enhance user experience and website performance. It explores the importance of themes in improving visual appeal, navigation, and SEO features of websites. The study relies on secondary data and highlights the methodology, objectives, and limitations of the research conducted by students from Adikavi Nannaya University under the guidance of Dr. SVVSN Murthy.

Uploaded by

kavyasruthii08
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 67

A CAPSTONE PROJECT ON

“INSTALLATION OF THEMES USING WORDPRESS ON LOCALHOST”


A “CAPSTONE PROJECT” submitted to the Department of Management
studies, Adikavi Nannaya University, Rajamahendravaram in partial fulfilment
for the award of Degree of
BACHELOR OF BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION
Submitted by
N. Sri Kavya Sruthi [Reg.no.210388400020]
R. Raja Sri [Reg.no.210388400024]
G. Anusha [Reg.no.210388400008]
G.M.S. Sai keerthi [Reg.no.210388400007]
[BBA -DM-IIIYEAR]
Under the esteemed guidance of
Dr. SVVSN MURTHY
MBA, MA(HR)&Ph.D.
PROFESSOR

DEPARTMENT OF MANAGEMENT STUDIES


ADITYA DEGREE COLLEGE FOR WOMEN AFFILIATED TO ADIKAVI NANNAYA
UNIVERSITY (ACCREDITED BY NAAC) RAJAMAHENDRAVARAM
(2021-2024)
DEPARTMENT OF MANAGEMENT STUDIES
ADITYA DEGREE COLLEGE FOR WOMEN, KAKINADA
(AFFILIATED TO ADIKAVI NANNAYA UNIVERSITY)

(B.B.A Programme)
CERTIFICATE

This is to certify that the capstone project entitled


“INSTALLATION OF THEMES USING WORDPRESS ON LOCALHOST” is a
bonafide work of N.SRI KAVYA SRUTHI, R. RAJA SRI, G. ANUSHA,
G.M.S. SAI KEERTHI Submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirement
for the award of the Degree of Bachelor of Business Administration
from ADIKAVI NANNAYA UNIVERSITY, RAJAMAHENDRAVARAM
carried out by them under my guidance and supervision.

PROJECT GUIDE HEAD OF THE DEPARTMENT

EXTERNAL
INTRODUCTION
WordPress (also known as WP or WordPress.org) is a web
content management system. It was originally created as a tool to publish blogs
but has evolved to support publishing other web content, including more
traditional websites, mailing lists and Internet forum, media galleries,
membership sites, learning management systems and online stores. Available as
free and open-source software, WordPress is among the most popular content
management systems – it was used by 42.8% of the top 10 million websites as
of October 2021
WordPress is written in PHP hypertext preprocessor language and paired with a
MySQL or MariaDB database.
A content management system (CMS) is a software platform that helps users
create, manage, and publish digital content. CMSs are primarily used for
websites and other online services.
A content management system helps you create, manage, and publish content
on the web. It also helps keep content organized and accessible so it can be
used and repurposed effectively. There are various kinds of content
management systems available—from cloud-based to a headless CMS—to
meet every audience need.
The major components of a CMS are the data repository, user interface,
workflow scheme, editorial tools, and output utilities.
To install the theme directly on the local website, go to WordPress dashboard >
Appearance > Themes. Next, search for the theme you want to install for the
local website. After finding the theme, press the “Install” button to install the
theme on WordPress localhost.
OBJECTIVES OF THE STUDY
1. To know how themes will improve user experience through a well-
designed theme.
2. To know how themes will enhance the visual appeal of the website by
installing a theme that aligns with the brand or content.
3. To assess the themes impact on website performance.
4. To ensure how the themes will increase easy navigation and readability.
NEED FOR THE STUDY
The need for the study is to understand WordPress. This study is to know about
the most primary important factor i.e., installation of themes in WordPress on
local host. This study helps to know the visual appeal of the website. This study
also helps to verify the themes security features and prioritize themes that are
SEO friendly to improve to website ranking.
METHODOLOGY OF THE STUDY
SECONDARY DATA:
Secondary data is information that is already available somewhere, whether it is
journals, on the internet, This study is based on secondary sources only i.e.,
➢ Textbooks
➢ Internet
SCOPE OF THE STUDY
This study cover on how to install the themes in WordPress on localhost. It
ensures easy navigation and readability. This study also allows to customize the
appearance and layout of the website during development before making it live.
LIMITATIONS OF THE STUDY
➢ WordPress is a vast subject but this project covered only certain concepts.
➢ Time is one of the constraint in doing this project.
➢ The information is gathered solely from secondary sources.
➢ Non availability of previous research studies.
➢ Non availability of resource such as journals and text books are another
limitations to do this project.
CHAPTER-2
INDUSTRIAL PROFILE
CONTENT MANAGEMENT SYSTEM:
A content management system (CMS) is a software application that allows users
to create, edit, and publish content. CMSes are often used for enterprise content
management (ECM) and web content management (WCM).
CMSes allow users to build and manage websites without having to code. Users
can log into the platform and edit the site's content and design without adjusting
the source code. Many CMSes also offer the option to edit with HTML/CSS.
CMSes can streamline the content-creation process, help manage teams, and
push content to a web page. They also allow for SEO optimization and can be
integrated with a wide range of other technologies.

Definition of CMS:
A content management system (CMS) is an application that is used to manage
content, allowing multiple contributors to create, edit and publish. Content in a
CMS is typically stored in a database and displayed in a presentation layer based
on a set of templates like a website.

Structure:
A CMS typically has two main components:
Content management application (CMA): A graphical user interface that allows
users to create, modify, delete, and publish content without HTML or other
programming language knowledge. The CMA also allows users to design web
pages using drag-and-drop features.
Content delivery application (CDA): Compiles content.
Installation types:
There are two types of CMS installation: on-premises and cloud-based. On-
premises installation means that the CMS software can be installed on the
server. This approach is usually taken by businesses that want flexibility in their
setup. Notable CMSs which can be installed on-premises are Wordpress.org,
Drupal, Joomla, Grav, ModX and others.
The cloud-based CMS is hosted on the vendor environment. Examples of notable
cloud-based CMSs are Square Space, Contentful, Wordpress.com, Webflow,
Ghost and WIX.
Special features:
1. Intuitive Dashboard:
At the core of every CMS is the admin dashboard. Every CMS should enable you
to manage all tasks involved in content production and distribution right from
your dashboard. These tasks include scheduling content, monitoring threats,
tracking user activity, installing modules and plugins, and reviewing performance
analytics, among other responsibilities.
Take CMS Hub, for example. Not only can you create multimedia blog posts and
landing pages in your dashboard — you can also manage, optimize, and track
their performance. And since it’s integrated with HubSpot’s marketing, sales,
and service tools, you can analyze website traffic reports in the same place that
you run A/B tests, manage ads, and edit URL redirects.
2. Powerful Content Editing and Publishing Tools:
The less work you have to do to add content to your website, the more work you
can put into making that content high-quality. As such, you need a powerful
content editor to ensure you can easily create and publish different types of
content from blog posts with custom layouts to landing pages with embedded
resources.
Ideally, you should be able to add images, videos, CTAs, forms, and more, and
rearrange these elements within the publishing interface. You’ll also need to be
able to preview the page before publishing.
Many CMS platforms have a WYSIWYG (“what you see is what you get”) editor
that allows you to modify a page without writing HTML code and to see changes
as you make them.
3. Version Control and Backups:
In addition to editing and publishing features, consider content management
systems that have a way to save and track your work as you go. You may find
yourself in a situation where you need to revert to an old version of your content
it’s a nice touch when a CMS makes that easy.
Also, how does the CMS handle backups? Are they automatic, or do you need to
create them manually? Are backups a native feature, or do you have to install an
extension for them? Best to find this out now than wait for a case of data loss, a
broken website, or a hack — in all of these cases, you’ll want an extra copy of
your site on hand.
Note that your web host may also provide backup services for your site. Review
your hosting plan (if you have one) to see if these services are included.
4. Multi-language Content Creation:
To expand your reach to customers in different countries, you need a CMS with
multi-language content features. This will make it quick and easy for you to
create different language variations of your pages.
With CMS Hub, you'll be able to not only create multi-language variants of a
specific page — you'll be able to test them.
5. Publishing Controls:
No matter the size of your business, it’s likely that more than one person will be
publishing content on your site. You might have authors responsible solely for
creating drafts, editors for reviewing those drafts, and administrators for
scheduling and publishing them.
6. Built-in SEO Tools:
A CMS with built-in SEO tools will help you optimize your content for search and
improve your chances of ranking on search engine results pages.
First, you should check that the platform itself is SEO-friendly: Does it use proper
HTML markup? SEO-friendly permalinks? Responsive design elements? These
are all fundamental practices all your pages should follow to be in good standing
with search engines.
After that, see if the CMS offers any advanced SEO features. CMS Hub offers SEO
recommendations as you create content. Below you can see recommendations
to include the keyword phrase in the title, add a meta description, and use two
subtopics. These suggestions are all designed to help visitors and search engines
better understand what the page is about, which, in turn, improves your ability
to rank.
In CMS Hub, you can also create topic clusters that automatically link supporting
content back to core “pillar” pages. This content strategy ensures search engines
can easily crawl your site and recognize your expertise on a given topic.
7. Detailed Analytics:
Insights like where your target persons are based, what device they’re using,
how they’re interacting with content on different devices, and which pieces of
content are most popular are crucial to refining your content strategy.
Ideally, your CMS will have built-in analytics for measuring these performance
indicators right in your dashboard. If it doesn’t, then it should offer an integration
with Google Analytics or another popular analytics tool.
With WordPress, for example, you can install a Google Analytics plugin. If you’re
using HubSpot with our WordPress Plugin, those analytics are directly in your
dashboard.
8. Pre-made Templates:
When looking at a platform's selection of apps and integrations, check out what
templates they offer as well. Because you can use a template rather than create
a post or page from scratch every time you want to publish new content, these
are key to simplifying your publishing process.
It's important to note that a template is not the same as a theme, though the
terms are often conflated. A template is a single-page layout that’s available
within a theme or is compatible with a theme and can be downloaded
separately. Some platforms offer pre-built landing page, website page, and email
templates to help maximize your marketing efforts.
Now let's say you don't find a template that meets all your needs. In that case,
you'd like a CMS that offers pre-designed templates and allows you to create
custom templates and styles.
CMS Hub is one example. In addition to providing over 6,000 templates in its
Asset Marketplace, HubSpot allows developers to create custom JavaScript,
HTML, HubL, and CSS assets in the same place that pages are published.
Here are some additional features of a content management system (CMS):
Security: CMSs should ensure the core code base is safe.
User permissions: CMSs have a hierarchy of user permissions to minimize
unauthorized publishing.
Versioning: Enables editors to retrieve previous versions of content.
Collaboration: CMS can act as a collaboration platform where users can retrieve
and work on content.
Detailed analytics: Allows you to track engagement across platforms.
Multilingual: Allows you to create and approve multilingual content.
Types of Content Management Systems:
A content management system is a software that helps create, organize, and
maintain digital content. Generally, CMSs support multiple users. They provide
ample benefits for large businesses, including significant cost savings, increased
collaboration among team technical documentation team members (even the
non-technically minded), and total control of content.
Understanding the different types of content management systems is a key step
in choosing the best option for your business.
Here are five popular content management solutions to help you organize
digital content:
1. Component Content Management System (CCMS):
A component content management system, or CCMS, differs from a standard
CMS in that it organizes content at a granular level. Instead of managing content
page by page, it takes words, phrases, paragraphs, or photos (also known as
“components”) and stores them in a central repository.
Designed for maximum content reuse, components are only stored once. The
CCMS acts as a consistent trusted source that publishes content across multiple
platforms, including mobile, PDF, and print.
2. Document Management System (DMS):
Paper is almost extinct. Tracking business files on paper is a thing of the past. A
document management system (DMS) offers a paperless solution to manage,
store, and track documents in a cloud. It provides an automated solution for
uploading, processing, and sharing business documents without the hassle of
printing, copying, or scanning.
3. Enterprise Content Management System (ECM):
An enterprise content management system collects, organizes, and delivers an
organization’s documentation, ensuring critical information is delivered to the
correct audience (employees, customers, business stakeholders, etc.)
An ECM gives all members of an organization easy access to the content they
need to complete projects and make important decisions. In addition, an ECM
deletes files after a certain retention period, ensuring no unnecessary content
takes up space.
4. Web Content Management System (WCMS):
A web content management system lets users manage digital components of a
website without prior knowledge of markup languages or web programming. A
WCMS provides collaboration, authoring, and administration tools to help
manage digital content. Unlike other CMSs, which deal with content destined for
both the web and print, a WCMS handles exclusively web content.
5. Digital Asset Management System (DAM):
With a digital asset management system, users can store, organize, and share
digital content with ease. A DAM offers a simple, centralized library where
clients, employees, or contractors can access digital content. These assets
include audio, creative files, video, documents, and presentations. A DAM is
cloud-based, so users can access content from anywhere.
What Is a Content Management System?
A CMS is an application that is used to manage content and publish it as well,
allowing multiple users (even those without coding knowledge) to contribute,
create, edit, and publish without having to involve a developer.
Your CMS platform also provides version management and authoring workflow
to keep large, global sites consistent.
If you further break down a content management system, there are two main
parts that help create your website.
The content management application (CMA) allows marketers, merchandisers,
and other content creators to work with digital content directly, without needing
to involve the IT department.
The content delivery application (CDA) acts as the back-end portion of the
website, taking the content that you enter into the templates and turning it into
a working website that visitors from around the world can access.
Web content management (WCM) is more or less another name for CMS,
because we are an industry that loves acronyms.
How Does a Content Management System Work?
A Content Management System (CMS) is a software application that allows users
to create, manage, and publish digital content, typically for websites or other
online platforms.
At its core, a CMS consists of two main components: a content creation interface
and a content delivery system. The content creation interface is where users can
create and edit content, such as text, images, and videos, using a variety of tools
and features. The content delivery system, on the other hand, is responsible for
displaying the content to website visitors or other end-users.
When a user creates new content in a CMS, it is typically stored in a database or
file system, along with metadata such as tags, categories, and publishing dates.
This makes it easy for users to search for and retrieve specific pieces of content
at a later time.
Once the content has been created and stored, it can be published to the website
or other platform by using templates or themes. These templates define the
layout and design of the content, ensuring that it is displayed consistently and
professionally across all pages of the website.
Some content management systems also include additional features, such as
analytics, search engine optimization (SEO) tools, and user management
capabilities. These features can help website owners to optimize their content
for search engines, track user behavior and engagement, and manage user
access and permissions.
On a more technical level, a CMS works by storing digital content in a structured
database or file system, and using software to retrieve and display that content
on a website or other digital platform.
Advantages:
1.Building:
In the early stages of your website development, you’ll probably create most, if
not all of the content. However, that is not sustainable in the long run. As your
business scales up, you will need more content and you’ll have trouble catching
up if you use the same strategy.
A CMS makes it easy for multiple users to collaborate on a single piece of
content. It is your one-stop-shop for all your content creation and collaboration.
For example, the writer can write the blog post while the graphics designer can
insert images. Then, the editor or content manager can check it for brand
consistency and publish it on the website.
This is what such a content collaboration workflow looks like in Story Chief.
If you have a team of employees that require access to your website, you can
use your CMS to define their user roles and permissions according to the access
that they need. This prevents them from accidentally changing something that
they shouldn’t.
2. Simplified Content Scheduling:
Tributers than yourself. Having a calendar allows you to plan your content in
advance and make sure you get the right mix of content types.
Unfortunately, organizing these articles and images can be a bit messy, especially
if they were created by somebody else. Content management software allows
you to draft your content and schedule it for later publishing. You can schedule
content a few days, weeks, or even months in advance so you don’t have to
worry about them getting lost somewhere.
3. Improved Security:
A data breach is a consistent threat that hovers over businesses large and small,
particularly during the COVID-19 pandemic. Businesses have become a prime
target for hackers looking to cash in on the world’s transition to digital.
So, if your business has a website, online security should be your main priority.
You should go with a CMS that has strict security features. Although some CMS
comes with security features baked right into the software, there are times when
they are not enough.
WordPress, for instance, is a popular hacker target. A study conducted by WP
White Security revealed that more than 70% of WordPress installations are
vulnerable to hacker attacks.
4. Accessible All the Time:
Choose a CMS system that is cloud-based so that you can access them from
anywhere, anytime, as long as you can connect to the internet. This accessibility
makes it practical for you and your team to work remotely anywhere in the
world.
You can have a writer in Australia, a graphic artist in China, and a content
manager in the US. As long as you have the perfect CMS system in place, you can
practically run your business and your website at home or in a coffee shop.
5. Mobile-Friendly:
sites. What this means is that you need to make sure that your website looks
good and runs fast on mobile devices.
Most CMS systems are mobile-friendly from the moment of install. However, you
have to ensure that the plug-ins, themes, and add-ons that you use are also
compatible with mobile devices.
Disadvantages of Content Management System:
1.Hacking and Security Threat:
Nearly all popular CMS platforms are on professional hackers’ hit list. WordPress
alone powers 60% of the websites. A hacker does not need a better reason to
mine data and make a quick buck. Furthermore, cybercriminals intend to hack
and destroy website businesses operating on CMS. These activities can prove to
be catastrophic if your business relies on online leads, sales, and revenue. Once
hacked, the SEO ranking drops down and negatively affects customer trust.
2.Slow loading:
Visitors usually have a shorter attention span. If a website doesn’t load fast
enough, users will bounce onto the next website. Also, Google prefers fast-
loading sites with constant updates. CMS is data-driven, as the website becomes
bulky, the loading time also increases which is not preferable.
3.Constant updates:
CMS platforms are prone to hackers. To stay on top and provide secure services,
they constantly update their services and these updates are released to patch
faults of previous versions. Most of the time, the software update will be smooth
and will integrate with the existing theme and plugins. However, there are
situations where the currently used themes and plugins do not recognize the
update and behave differently. When this happens, it affects the functionality of
the website and reflects negatively on the business. If the issue is not resolved
on time, it will tamper with the business workings and ultimately incur losses.
4.Hidden costs:
CMS comes with financial hidden costs as well. It might be in the form of paid
plugins, themes, premium updates, and many more. Superficially, it looks well
and good to have a highly affordable website. But if you are planning on
expanding your customer base and adding functionalities to a base website, it
comes at a hefty price.
5.Limited individuality:
There are so many themes and templates offered by the CMS platforms. These
are either free or paid. Most of the time the one that resonates with your
business would be paid. Regardless of the cost, even the best of themes will not
be a perfect fit and it will need modification to satisfy your business needs. After
all the hard work, you realize the same theme can be found on multiple websites.
Therefore, it leads to a loss of individuality which can be frustrating.
Importance of CMS to your business:
If you carefully source and implement the right CMS for your web project, it
can help you:
➢ To streamline your authoring process
➢ To update your website remotely, as and when needed
➢ To ensure consistency in appearance and 'look and feel' of the website
➢ To customise your website to meet your precise business needs
➢ To use non-technical staff to make updates, although they may need basic
training
➢ To reduce website maintenance costs
➢ To eliminate the need for web developers or webmasters for simple
content updates
➢ To integrate your website with other business applications, such as
customer relationship and asset management systems
➢ To store archived content, either for future use or reference
➢ To use dynamic marketing to improve sales or user satisfaction
➢ To optimise your website and content for search engines or mobile use
To make the most of these benefits, you will need to define:
➢ Your workflows and processes.
➢ Your technical requirements.
➢ This involves deciding who should have access to the CMS, and at what
level. You should also establish the approval procedures for creating,
publishing and managing your digital content.
How to choose the best CMS for your website:
There is almost no limit to the factors that must be considered before an
organization decides to invest in a CMS. There are a few basic functionalities to
always look for, such as an easy-to-use editor interface and intelligent search
capabilities.
For some organizations, the software they use depends on more specific
requirements. For example, consider the organization's size and geographic
dispersion. The CMS administrator must know how many people will be using
the application, whether the CMS will require multilingual support and what size
support team will be needed to maintain operations.
It is also important to consider the level of control both administrators and end
users will have when using the CMS. Organizations must also consider the
diversity of the electronic data forms that they use. All types of digital content
should be indexed easily.
Additional guidelines for choosing the right CMS:
1.Get input from employees and leadership:
It is important to know who will be using this new CMS and what they will be
using it for. Businesses should involve the marketing team, chief content officer,
IT staff and others.
2.Assess current and future business needs:
A CMS must address an organization's current needs and any future business
plans. Considerations include whether the system will integrate with the
business's current tech stack, and whether the CMS incorporates forward
thinking features such as RESTful APIs.
3.Research options:
Businesses must create a short-list of software that meets their needs and learn
about these options including talking to users with similar use cases to learn
about their experiences with the products.
4.Write a request for proposal:
This will give vendors the opportunity to address a business's needs and explain
why they can provide the right software for the job.
5.Evaluate vendor responses:
Businesses should consider the functionality, training and support that each
vendor offers. Demos enable businesses to understand how each system works
and what integrations it offers.
Tips on Choosing the Right CMS:
Budget: Consider licensing costs, implementation, updates, upgrades, and
optimization.
Support: Look for an active community, official support channels, and
documentation or user guides.
Scalability: Make sure the CMS can grow with your organization.
Integration: Find out how the CMS integrates with other tools and systems.
Usage scenarios: Consider how the CMS will work with your specific users and
content.
Don't build custom software.
Avoid heavy developer reliance.
Don't limit your system to one code.
Test and get a proof-of-concept.
Get demos from vendors.
Ask about security expertise.
Examples of different CMS:
There are many free and subscription-based CMS available for personal and
enterprise use. Here are some examples of the more popular content
management system providers:
1.Joomla:
This is a free and open-source web content management system built on an MVC
framework. Joomla is written in PHP script language and offers features such as
caching, RSS feeds, blog posts, search, and support for language translation. It is
best for small to medium-sized business looking for similar flexibility to
WordPress, in addition to more language options. It is a popular open-source
CMS used by over 75 million websites. Similar to WordPress, Joomla is free and
there are thousands of extensions and themes readily available for you to use. It
also touts itself as search engine friendly, mobile-friendly, multilingual, flexible,
and capable of multi-user permission levels.
Most people find Joomla fairly easy-to-use, even if they have zero technical
experience. But it isn’t an all-in-one solution and requires you to do a lot of
customization to get all of the features you would normally have in a premium
CMS right out of the box. More technical users might also find Joomla limited in
capability since it really is aimed more toward people that need a simple CMS
without all of the frills.

2.WordPress:
This is another free and open-source WCMS based on PHP and MySQL. This
software is highly customizable, with many themes and WordPress plugins. It is
best for small to medium-sized businesses that want great flexibility in their
customization and integration. Since its introduction in 2003, WordPress.org has
been a favourite among bloggers for its ease of use and open-source flexibility.
It doesn’t have as many built-in marketing features as HubSpot does, but with
millions of plugins and templates to choose from, it does offer the ability to add
them and, frankly, virtually anything you can imagine on your website. One thing
we must note is that with its third-party templates, plugins, and open-source
framework, WordPress is very susceptible to security issues like hacking. If you
choose this platform, you must be extra cognizant of threats and how to avoid
them.

3.Backdrop CMS:
This is a free and open-source CMS that is part of the Drupal project and provides
affordable CMS for small- and medium-sized organizations. On its own, Backdrop
offers just the most basic web content management features, but it can be
extended with the help of the various modules.
Rather than generating an actual website like most options, Magnolia develops
what it calls “pure content,” and then delivers it to other channels via powerful
REST APIs, whether that be a website, a mobile app, a wearable, or even a voice
device. This makes maintaining your digital experiences a lot easier because they
can all be managed from one platform.
4.Wix:
This CMS offers both free and paid plans. Features include team collaboration
tools, third-party integrations, enterprise-grade security, hundreds of design
templates, and the ability to add custom code. It is best for small to medium-
sized businesses and solopreneurs.
It is a leading cloud-based content management system that is free to get started
with. It allows you to build your website, using one of their 500+ templates — or
you can start from scratch using code. Some of the robust features Wix offers
include an online store, online scheduling software, blogging, a logo maker,
domain services, and SEO tools.

5.HubSpot CMS:
This paid CMS features a drag-and-drop page builder, SEO recommendations and
website themes. It is best for Small to medium-sized businesses looking for
seamless integration with their marketing efforts. If you invested the time and
money to integrate all of the necessary components of an effective digital or
inbound marketing strategy into any CMS, you would essentially be creating your
own version of HubSpot on top of your website. Rather than going through that
hassle and cost, CMS Hub gives you all of those features in one tightly integrated,
easy-to-use
As a part of HubSpot, you also can easily integrate your website and marketing
together. For instance, when a visitor fills out a form on your HubSpot website,
they will be entered into your CRM (assuming it is the HubSpot CRM). From
there, you can track their behavior and activity on your site and personalize the
marketing they receive and the on-site experience they have based on this.
6. Magnolia:
This is an open-source, headless CMS that enables integrations with numerous
marketing technologies -- including CRM systems, analytics, and marketing
automation tools. Features include personalization and optimization, and digital
asset management.
Magnolia can be connected to any third-party channel, including analytics tools,
CRMs, and eCommerce tools, simultaneously. In fact, the platform dedicates
user inference (UI) slots to displaying data from these systems so you can see the
analytics for a page within the Magnolia platform or pull data/images from your
eCommerce platform directly into Magnolia. This gives you comprehensive data
to track customer journeys and behavior and segment audiences.
7. Sitefinity:
It is best for businesses of all sizes that are looking for a tool that can create and
maintain a unique digital experience across multiple platforms. With users like
Dannon and Gatorade under its belt, Sitefinity is actually one of the most
established CMS and digital marketing platforms around.
More recently referred to as a “digital experience platform,” Sitefinity touts easy
content management, rich data, smart insights, personalization, and
optimization, chatbot capabilities, eCommerce, and multi-channel management
functionality. Sitefinity also has what it calls “low code integration,” so you can
expand your marketing automation, reduce development costs, and increase
overall efficiency. Unfortunately, some complaints you will commonly hear is
that the platform doesn’t include enough templates, and developers who
specialize in Sitefinity are more difficult to find.

8. Shopify:
It is best for Small to medium-sized businesses that sell products online.
If your small business relies on eCommerce, Shopify is one of the more reliable
options. Shopify offers all of the essentials you need to sell your products online,
build a website to support it, and manage your inventory. This includes
eCommerce hosting, domain services shopping card setup, drop shipping, and
even point-of-sale hardware.
Shopify also offers an extensive theme library for your store and website, as well
as access to marketing resources like logo design, stock photos, name
generation, and 24/7 support.

9 Evoq Content:
It is small to medium-sized businesses that want healthy flexibility with
customization and functionality as well as marketing tools.
Evoq Content is an enterprise CMS that satisfies both IT and marketing
departments with its balance between functionality and ease of use. In addition
to the essential content creation and SEO features, Evoq Content supports
valuable marketing automation tools like workflows and personalization,
allowing you to deploy robust campaigns without much heavy lifting.
In addition to this, it offers easy asset management, mobile responsiveness,
content and website performance analytics, team permission settings, and
integration to many popular tools, including Marketo, Optimizely, and Google
Analytics. The biggest drawback of this platform is a need for physical resources
to support adoption and use. Users complain that Evoq Content lacks training
materials for module development. Despite this, however, most people rave
about the company’s knowledgeable support team.
CHAPTER-3
COMPANY PROFILE
WordPress.com is a web building platform for self-publishing that is popular for
blogging and other works. It is owned and operated by Automatic, Inc. It is run
on a modified version of WordPress software. This website provides free blog
hosting for registered users and is financially supported via paid upgrades,
"VIP" services and advertising.
History:
The website opened to beta testers on August 8, 2005 and opened to the
public on November 21, 2005. It was initially launched as an invitation-only
service, although at one stage, accounts were also available to users of the
Flock web browser. As of February 2017, over 77 million new posts and 42.7
million new comments are published monthly on the service.
Registration is not required to read or comment on blogs hosted on the site,
except if chosen by the blog owner. Registration is required to own or post in a
weblog. All the basic and original features of the site are free-to-use. However,
some features are not available in the free plan: install PHP plugins, customize
theme CSS, write JavaScript, domain mapping, domain registration, removal of
ads, website redirection, video upload, storage upgrades.
In September 2010, it was announced that Windows Live Spaces, Microsoft's
blogging service, would be closing and that Microsoft would partner with
WordPress.com for blogging services.
In December 2019, WordPress.com gave SFTP and PHPMyAdmin access to
Business and eCommerce plans.
Advertising:
If the free plan is in use, readers see ads on WordPress.com pages, though
WordPress.com claims that it is rare. On its support pages, WordPress.com says
it "sometimes display advertisements on your blog to help pay the bills". In
order to remove the ads, users need to purchase a Plan that starts at $4 a
month (if billed annually).
Censorship:
In August 2007, Adnan Oktar, a Turkish creationist, was able to get a Turkish
court to block Internet access to WordPress.com for all of Turkey. His lawyers
argued that blogs on WordPress.com contained libellous material on Oktar and
his colleagues which WordPress.com staff was unwilling to remove.
Matt Mullenweg commented: "WordPress.com supports free speech and
doesn't shut people down for 'uncomfortable thoughts and ideas, in fact, we're
blocked in several countries because of that.
In August 2018, WordPress.com began removing several pages that suggested
the Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting was a hoax.
Politics:
In advance of the Australian Marriage Law Postal Survey of 2017, a rainbow
banner was placed at the top of the WordPress Reader. This was also done in
June 2015, in celebration of the US Supreme Court ruling that same-sex
marriage is a constitutional right.
Difference Between WordPress.org and WordPress.com:
If you look up WordPress on Google or other search engines, you will come
across two related websites: WordPress.com and WordPress.org. This might get
confusing for beginners since both sites are similar in their names and branding
but differ in purpose and target audience.
WordPress.org:
WordPress.org houses the free content management system software used to
run a self-hosted version of WordPress.
To build a self-hosted website, you must first register your domain name and
purchase a web hosting plan. The type and quality of your chosen web hosting
plan will determine the performance of your website.
Additionally, users can exercise more control over the web server space they’re
renting from the web hosting provider by self-hosting.
The self-hosted version of WordPress allows for the full potential of WordPress.
Users can look up and install any WordPress theme or plugin they want – even
ones they’ve made themselves.
The self-hosted version of WordPress is excellent for users who value high
flexibility, customization and plan to scale their websites in the future.
WordPress.com:
WordPress.com is a hosting company that uses a website builder based on the
WordPress content management system for all the websites it hosts. Unlike its
self-hosted counterpart, WordPress.com is hosted, which means that it
manages the web servers that store its users’ websites.
Users who sign up for the service for free are required to use a branded
domain name, such as yourwebsitename.wordpress.com. To use a custom
domain name, one must upgrade to a paid plan.
The free version also has other limitations. For example, users can’t install any
WordPress themes or plugins.
Overall, hosted WordPress.com is more suitable for users who want to create a
website quickly and don’t mind limited flexibility and customization.
Features:
WordPress powers more than 43% of the web — a figure that rises every day.
Everything from simple websites, to blogs, to complex portals and enterprise
websites, and even applications, are built with WordPress.
WordPress combines simplicity for users and publishers with under-the-hood
complexity for developers. This makes it flexible while still being easy-to-use.
The following is a list of some of the features that come as standard with
WordPress; however, there are literally thousands of plugins that extend what
WordPress does, so the actual functionality is nearly limitless. You are also free
to do whatever you like with the WordPress code, extend it or modify in any
way or use it for commercial projects without any licensing fees. That is the
beauty of free software, free refers not only to price but also the freedom to
have complete control over it.
Here are some of the features:
1.Simplicity:
Simplicity makes it possible for you to get online and get publishing, quickly.
Nothing should get in the way of you getting your website up and your content
out there. WordPress is built to make that happen.
2.Flexibility:
With WordPress, you can create any type of website you want: a personal blog
or website, a photoblog, a business website, a professional portfolio, a
government website, a magazine or news website, an online community, even
a network of websites. You can make your website beautiful with themes, and
extend it with plugins. You can even build your very own application.
WordPress comes packed with a lot of features for every user. For every feature
that’s not in WordPress core, there’s a plugin directory with thousands of
plugins. Add complex galleries, social networking, forums, social media
widgets, spam protection, calendars, fine-tune controls for search engine
optimization, and forms.
3.Built-in Comments:
Your blog is your home, and comments provide a space for your friends and
followers to engage with your content. WordPress’s comment tools give you
everything you need to be a forum for discussion and to moderate that
discussion.
4.Search Engine Optimized:
WordPress is optimized for search engines right out of the box. For more fine-
grained SEO control, there are plenty of SEO plugins to take care of that for
you.
5.Use WordPress in Your Language:
WordPress is available in more than 70 languages. If you or the person you’re
building the website for would prefer to use WordPress in a language other
than English, that’s easy to do.
6.Easy Installation and Upgrades:
WordPress has always been easy to install and upgrade. Plenty of web hosts
offer one-click WordPress installers that let you install WordPress with, well,
just one click! Or, if you’re happy using an FTP program, you can create a
database, upload WordPress using FTP, and run the installer.
7.Importers:
Using blog or website software that you aren’t happy with? Running your blog
on a hosted service that’s about to shut down? WordPress comes with
importers for Blogger, LiveJournal, Movable Type, TypePad, Tumblr, and
WordPress. If you’re ready to make the move, we’ve made it easy for you.
8.Own Your Data:
Hosted services come and go. If you’ve ever used a service that disappeared,
you know how traumatic that can be. If you’ve ever seen adverts appear on
your website, you’ve probably been pretty annoyed. Using WordPress means
no one has access to your content. Own your data, all of it — your website,
your content, your data.
9.Freedom:
WordPress is licensed under the GPL which was created to protect your
freedoms. You are free to use WordPress in any way you choose: install it, use
it, modify it, distribute it. Software freedom is the foundation that WordPress is
built on.
10.Community:
As the most popular open-source CMS on the web, WordPress has a vibrant
and supportive community. Ask a question on the support forums and get help
from a volunteer, attend a WordCamp or Meetup to learn more about
WordPress, read blogs posts and tutorials about WordPress. Community is at
the heart of WordPress, making it what it is today.
Popular Sites Using WordPress:
Let’s go over some popular websites and examine how you can apply their
design features and tricks to your site.
1.The New Yorker:
The New Yorker’s site employs serif fonts to achieve a simple yet classy look in
line with the magazine’s print counterpart.
Online versions of publications don’t have to fully emulate the print version.
However, transferring some of the familiar qualities into the online space
creates a more consistent brand experience.
2.TechCrunch:
TechCrunch is the go-to website for people interested in cutting-edge
technology and startup news. The website achieves a clean and minimalist look
by employing sans serif fonts with plenty of white space.
The website uses a sticky navigation menu that remains visible as the readers
scroll. You can apply this design element to make it easier for visitors to explore
your website and locate the content they want to read.
3.Sony Music:
Sony Music’s website is an excellent example of successful commercial brands
making use of WordPress.
The website design is eye-catching and bold, achieved by using an image slider
of Sony Music’s artists, embedded videos, and all-cap text for the headings and
menu items.
Sliders are a dynamic yet space-efficient way to highlight your content – you
can use them to showcase multiple images.
If you’re building a website for your band, consider adding an audio player to
allow visitors to preview your content easily.
How to Start a Site with WordPress
If you’re convinced that WordPress is the right platform for you, it’s time to
begin building your website on it.
If you have a website on WordPress.com, migrating to WordPress.org is simple.
All you need to do is export all of the content from the WordPress.com site
before following the steps below.
Here are the steps to create a WordPress site:
1.Buy a domain name. Check the availability of the domain name you want
using a domain checker and purchase it from a domain registrar.
2.Choose a hosting service provider. Make sure to choose a reliable hosting
provider that has good customer reviews.
3.Buy a web hosting plan. Choose a web hosting plan that fits your needs and
budget. To get a hosting plan that’s optimized for WordPress, take a look at our
WordPress hosting plans.
4.Install WordPress. Most hosting providers offer a one-click WordPress
installation tool on the web hosting control panel.
5.Customize the website. Choose a WordPress theme that fits your brand and
content the best, install the plugins you need, add widgets, and tweak the
design using the theme customizer.
6.Start creating content. Create the essential static web pages and start
publishing blog posts.
7.Promote the website. Drive traffic to your brand-new WordPress site using
various methods, such as SEO, social media marketing, and email marketing.
Should I Use WordPress?
Whether or not you should use WordPress depends on your needs. If you need
a flexible and scalable platform for your website, it’s a great choice.
WordPress is an incredibly versatile website platform that allows users to build
all kinds of sites. If you want to start a blog, attract new clients with an online
portfolio, post video tutorials, or create a business website, you can use
WordPress to do so.
It’s excellent for beginners, too, as it’s significantly more accessible than coding
a website from scratch. There are many online courses and resources to learn
WordPress as well as a large and active community.
We hope this article has helped you get to know what a WordPress website is.
If you have any questions or remarks, leave them in the comments section
below.
What Is WordPress FAQ
How Does WordPress Work?
WordPress runs on a database system that allows you to add, modify, and
organize files, themes, plugins, and all types of content. Each WordPress user
has access to the dashboard to manage their website in one place.
Is WordPress Good for Freelancing?
WordPress is perfect for freelancers because it is affordable to set up and
provides opportunities to scale your website or business. A lot of freelancers
using WordPress earn $3,000 to $15,000 for every project they take.
What Is the Difference Between WordPress and a Website?
WordPress is a platform that provides you with the tools to create a website. A
website is a collection of web pages where you publish your content on a
server.
Is WordPress Easier Than HTML?
It is easier to customize a WordPress site than an HTML site as it doesn’t
require much coding. WordPress also offers more flexibility in terms of
maintenance and compatibility.
Pros of choosing WordPress
1. User Friendly CMS:
WordPress is a strong content management system because of its origin in
blogging. It is very easy for an admin to navigate through the backend of their
WordPress site, edit pages and upload new content. WordPress makes it simple
to organize content without a lot of website management knowledge.
2. Plugins:
There are over 54,000 mostly free and paid plugins available to WordPress
users. These plugins allow you to customize and enhance any WordPress site. If
you need to make specific changes to the functionality on your site, chances
are there is a plugin to do just that. We wrote a guide on how to assess the
quality of these plugins to ensure they don’t hurt your site’s security.
3. SEO:
The importance of SEO best practices are at an all time high. WordPress does a
good job of promoting these best practices. There are many SEO plugins
available to help optimize content, meta tags, keyword focus and much more!
Our plugin of choice here at ArcStone is Yoast SEO.
Having access to free plugins, like Yoast, means each WordPress site is SEO
ready. There isn’t a better platform than WordPress when it comes to SEO
optimization.
4. Responsive:
WordPress has thousands of themes available. Generally, these themes are
very reliable when it comes to being responsive. With an increasing amount of
internet surfing done on mobile devices, having a mobile-friendly site with
consistency across all devices is very important to the UX; WordPress does a
good job with this. Get some guidance in selecting your theme with “How to
choose the best WordPress theme for your needs.”
5. Open source:
“WordPress is an open-source software and any one can use, study, change and
redistribute its source code” (WPBeginner). Many of the themes and plugins
are free under the GPLv2 license and being an open-source software,
WordPress programmers are able to openly share code online. The sharing of
code can result in the ability to save a lot of developing time and costs by using
an existing code.
Using an open-source platform is also valuable when you’re working with a 3rd
party partner or agency to develop your WordPress website. You won’t be
stuck working with a proprietary software that only a small group of developers
can work on. There are a number of different WordPress developers out there
that have the ability to support your website if you ever need to change
partners.
Cons
1. Updates:
Installing updates is important to the health of your WordPress site, but can be
a nuisance if not done thoughtfully. Premium WordPress themes are updated
and improved often. These updates are important to maintain proper security
on WordPress websites. Updates may bring some small problems to a website
in which case you may have to revert to an older WordPress state.
To prevent this, at ArcStone we vet updates before implementing them across
clients’ sites and keep a close eye on each site after installing the update. This
is part of why, if you don’t have a developer or IT team, it might be best to have
a professional host and support your WordPress site.
2. Vulnerability:
Being an open-source platform, WordPress is attractive to potential hackers. To
mitigate this risk, again, it is always good to be knowledgeable in choosing
plugins and themes for your WordPress site; always assess the quality of a
WordPress plugin and install with caution.
3. Speed:
Certain themes contain a lot of unnecessary generic code. This can decrease
the speed of the site and cause slow load times. Without prior WordPress
experience it can be hard to understand what code you need and what code
you can do without. Again, this is something an agency like ArcStone can help
you navigate!
4. Customization:
We all hesitate to invest in customization, as it can get expensive. WordPress is
a very flexible tool unlike many of the other drag and drop web builder tools
out there. However, if you aren’t a WordPress expert and you didn’t have one
develop your site, then this can be an issue. As mentioned above, updating
core WordPress may cause some problems on your site. These updates may
break up some of the functionality and if you don’t have best practices
employed when designing the site, this can become an issue.
With all these factors to consider, we will always recommend you at least
consult with a WordPress expert when building out a WordPress website. Many
of the cons listed above can be swept away with the right person and/or
agency managing your website. Consider reading our blog post on choosing a
web agency to help you launch your most user-friendly and secure website yet.
If you are interested in learning more about ArcStone, please contact us today!
We offer WordPress hosting, support, complete redesigns or partial website
refreshes.
CHAPTER-4
THEORITICAL INTERPRETATION
INSTALLATION OF THEMES USING WORDPRESS ON
LOCALHOST
INSTALLATION OF THEMES USING WORDPRESS ON LOCALHOST
●The first step will be to download a theme file to your computer. For this part
of the tutorial, I am going to download this theme.
●After the download is complete, we are going to copy the zipped file to our
WordPress folder in htdocs folder, assuming that you are using Xampp. Inside
the WordPress folder, navigate to the themes folder and copy the zipped file
there. In my case, I am navigating to C:\xampp > htdocs > new_WP > wp-
content > themes. Notice that any themes already installed can also be seen
here.
●We will now extract the theme files into this folder.
Extracting the theme file
●After extracting the file, log in to the admin dashboard and navigate to
themes through Appearance > Themes as shown on the other steps above.
●You will be taken to the themes page where you can see the themes that you
have installed on your WordPress installation. Among these themes, there is
the Twenty Fourteen theme we have just installed.
Newly installed theme
●To activate the theme, move the mouse cursor on it to get the Activate and
Live Preview buttons. Click on the activate button to have the theme activated.
Activating the newly installed theme
Installing through the WordPress Dashboard
A fresh install of WordPress comes with a few themes already installed such as
themes named twenty seventeen and twenty sixteen. These themes are quite
simple and one might one to change them. There are plenty of free themes
that can also be downloaded through the WordPress dashboard. To do that, we
are going to follow these steps;
●The first step is to log in to the WordPress dashboard then navigate to
Themes through Appearance > Themes as shown below.
Navigating to themes through the dashboard
●This will take you to another page where you will see all the themes that you
currently have installed. These are the default themes that come with
WordPress. At the top of this screen, there is an Add New button. Click on this
button to add a new theme.
Add New button
●Assuming that you have an internet connection, you will be taken to another
page where there are multiple of themes that you can install and activate. You
can sort them by featured, popular, latest and favorites. Identify the theme that
you would like to install and point at it with the mouse cursor to get more
options on previewing and installation.
Installing a theme
●Before installing a theme, you might want to preview it and see if it meets
your requirements. Click on the Preview button shown above to do so. If you
are happy with the theme, click on the Install button shown above. This will
start installing the theme. When the installation is done, the buttons above
changes to Activate and Live Preview as shown below. Click on the Activate
button to activate the theme.
Activating the theme
We have now successfully installed and activated the Adelle theme above. If
you visit your website, you will realize that it takes its design from this theme.
Uploading a Theme File from your Computer
Not all themes can be found in the WordPress themes section of the admin
dashboard. Some theme developers sell their themes through their sites or
through popular sites such as Theme Forest. Here are steps to follow to install
such themes by uploading a theme file from your computer;
●The first step is to download the theme to your computer. I am going to
download this theme for this part of this tutorial. The theme is downloaded to
my downloads folder in a zipped format.
●After the download is complete, navigate to Themes at your WordPress
admin dashboard through Appearance > Themes as shown on installing a
theme through the admin dashboard above.
●This will take you to the themes page where there is an Add New button at
the top. Click on this button.
Add new button
●You will now be taken to available themes that can be installed through the
dashboard. At the top of this page, there is an Upload Theme button. Click on
this button.
Upload Theme button
●This will open a window that allows you to upload a theme from your
computer. Click on the Choose File button and navigate to your downloads
folder on your computer where you have the downloaded theme.
Choosing the file to upload
●Once you have chosen the theme file to upload (remember it is supposed to
be in a zipped format), click on the Install Now button as shown below.
Install Now button
●Installation of the theme will begin. This will take just a moment but it
depends on the size of the theme you are installing. After a successful
installation, you will be taken to a page that looks like the one below where you
can preview the theme, activate the theme or return to the themes page. Click
on the activate link to activate the theme.
CHAPTER-5
DATA ANALYSIS AND INTERPRETATIONS
. STEP-1: Google chrome screenshot.

This is the first step in the process of downloading the word press. Firstly, we
have to open the Google chrome because the Google has the ability to search
and solve our queries of what we are searching for in the Google. For
downloading word press it is absolutely necessary to open the Google.
STEP-2: Searching for WordPress in Google.
After opening the Google, we have to type the download word press in the
search tab. After that the search tab will take us to the webpage here, we will
find many web pages for downloading word press it is necessary to download-
wordpress.org. This website we will find at the top of the websites list. Word
press provides the most amazing way of creating websites and blogs. More than
60% of the websites are built using word press. So, it can be said this popular
content management system is famous for developing blogging sites and
websites.

STEP-3: Downloading the WordPress.

After searching in Google search tab about the downloading-wordpress.org we


have to select the first website wordpress.org this we can seen in the above
process. In this step we will find the Download word press 6.1. This version is
highly necessary and also it provides one of the best features for the creating
blog.
STEP-4: After downloading the WordPress.

Interpretation:
After downloading the word press, we will see the HOWDY! Thank you message
for successfully downloading word press. And also, we are able to see four
options in the message they are:
• Get involved in word press.
• Join a local word press meet up.
• Attend a word camp.
• Support word press and open-source education
STEP-5: Open the file manager and go to PC.

After downloading word press in your system now go to file manager and then
go to this PC and click on downloads and then we can observe wordpress-6.1.1
in recent downloads.

STEP-6: Extract and copy the files.


Click on that and we get that below folder and then click on extract files. Then
the files will be extracted and we should copy all the files.

STEP-7: After extracting and copying the files click on ok to continue the process.

After clicking on extract files, the below interface will appear click on ok to
continue the process. Then the process of extracting files will be in the process
to extract the files.
STEP-8: Files will extract from wordpress.

By Clicking on ok automatically the files will start extracting from WordPress. The
process will continue.

STEP-9: Wordpress-6.1.1

After the completion extracting files then another wordpress-6.1.1 will appear.
We can observe that below.
STEP-10: open the Xampp control panel

For continuing the process, we must open Xampp control panel in your system
to run the WordPress application.

STEP-11: Run the WordPress application

Open the Xampp control panel and then click on start options for Apache and
MySQL modules then only the WordPress can run.
STEP-12: Search for the localhost phpMyAdmin in the Google.

Go to google and then search for the localhost phpMyAdmin to continue the
step.

STEP-13: click on the above URL in the interface.


Click on that above search to get the below interface and the click on
http://localhost/phpmyadmin.
STEP-14: Click on the below URL.

Now click on that below URL.

STEP-15: Page will appear in phpMyAdmin


And then we can get the below page in phpMyAdmin.

STEP-16: Click on the database.

After that click on the databases to create new database. The next step in this
process is to create database and name it.

STEP-17: Open the Xampp folder


Now go to this PC and click on local disk (c:) and open that Xampp folder which
is below in page.
STEP-18: Click on htdocs.

Click on Xampp then the below folder will appear and then click on htdocs.

STEP-19: Create a new folder.

After clicking htdocs the below database will display in that create a new folder.
STEP-20: Name the new folder.

Then a new folder will appear then should name it as below by saving it.

STEP-21: Open the WordPress.

Keeping the above step aside and then go to downloads and open WordPress.
STEP-22: Copy the files.

Then copy the below displayed folders by clicking ctrl-c the files will
automatically copied.

STEP-23: Paste the files.


We should paste that files in the newly created folder so again we should go to
local disk (c:) and click Xampp and then htdocs and in the end click on CMsirclass-
5 and click on ctrl-v to paste the files.

STEP-24: Sending files from WordPress to CMsirclass-5.

For the coping of items, it takes some time for sending files from WordPress to
CMsirclass-5.
STEP-25:Search for the localhost in the Google.

Again, go to google and search for the localhost/CMsirclass-5.

STEP-26: Select the language in the interface.

The below interface will appear click on continue after selecting the language
you want.
STEP-27: Click on let’s go to continue the process.

Now click on let’s go.

STEP-28:
Fill the database connection details to continue the process.
STEP-29: Click on Run the Installation.

After clicking on submit in above step now click on run the installation

STEP-30: Fill the information and click on install wordpress.

Fill the information and keep a strong password and then enter your email and
click on install WordPress.
STEP-31: Click on login.

After install WordPress then the below interface will appear and click on login
option.

STEP-32:

Now enter the username and password to login into the WordPress.
STEP-33: Open the Wordpress Dashboard.

This is the last step where the WordPress dashboard will open. And this is the
process for installing WordPress.

STEP-34: Go to Appearance in the WordPress Dashboard.

Select Appearance
STEP-35: Go to Themes and select a theme.

Select the themes and search for the theme you want to install.

STEP-36: Install and activate the selected Theme.

Select the install button and activate the theme you have installed and this is the
overall process to install the themes using WordPress on localhost.
CHAPTER-6
FINDINGS
1.It is found that how to install the WordPress and download WordPress
themes on localhost.
2.It is found that how to up file and extract the files.
3.It is noticed that the examining of database name.
4.According to the study, we have know the different types of paid and free
themes which are useful to build website in WordPress.
5.It is noticed that the overview of the themes or learn about the themes
features to understand in a better way.
SUGGETIONS
1.would like to suggest that it’s easy to install WordPress and download WP
themes on local host
2.My suggestions is that we can know how to up file and extract the files from
WordPress
3.It’s suggested that how can we examine the data base name
4.It’s to be suggested that we have huge number of paid and free themes, which
are useful to build an website
5.I would like to suggest that we can know the overview of the themes features
to understand it in a better way.
CONCLUSION
By doing this project, it’s helps to understand more about WordPress for the
usage of blogs and to build the websites. Mainly this project helped to
understand the WordPress main process like Installation of WordPress and the
Installation of themes in WordPress on localhost. The study also covered the
quality of the features in the WordPress. I sincerely hope that the WordPress will
continuously improves it’s features to attract more users and maintains some
security measures while login’s.

You might also like